How to be a savvy Mac software shopper
#1
Posted 25 February 2011 - 09:46 AM
#2
Posted 25 February 2011 - 10:56 AM
I will most likely only ever get Apple software from the App Store.
#3
Posted 25 February 2011 - 11:31 AM
Actually, that's not technically true. As I understand it, those other Macs must be also running Snow Leopard. So no, not just "any" Mac linked to your iTunes account.......
#4
Posted 25 February 2011 - 12:27 PM
That's why, when I can, I still by direct from the developer except, as you note, when that developer is Apple and is offering a substantial discount.
#5
Posted 25 February 2011 - 01:26 PM
Why backup if you can just re-download you ask?
I've learned from painful experience that you should not assume that an application you can download today will be there tomorrow:
- The developer may stop offering particular versions of the application. For example, you may need an older version to run on Tiger, but the developer now only offers the Leopard download
- The developer may stop offering the application at all
- The developer's web site may no longer exist
- An application that was previously free may now be commercial
Even if you had CDs of the original install, you can hit the same problem with updates. An update that exists today may not exist tomorrow.
We are already seeing this problem on iPhone apps. The developer may update the app to a version that requires a newer version of iOS. If you allow it to update, you can end up with a version that can't run on the iPhone. And the old, working version is gone -- and you can't download it anymore from the app store.
Therefore, given a choice between a CD and a download, I will always pick the CD. And I backup every download several different ways, and save all the updaters.
#6
Posted 25 February 2011 - 03:40 PM
SepiaPhoto, AdjustPhoto and BWPhoto anyone ($1 each)?
http://bit.ly/elGngL
By Impact Financials, Inc. (The name might give you an idea of their priority.)
Or Preview (free and installed already)?
#7
Posted 26 February 2011 - 01:28 PM
Macnutjohn, on 25 February 2011 - 11:31 AM, said:
Actually, that's not technically true. As I understand it, those other Macs must be also running Snow Leopard. So no, not just "any" Mac linked to your iTunes account.......
Well no crap genius, you need Snow Leopard to have the App store that that would go without saying.
#8
Posted 28 February 2011 - 01:00 PM
NOSFERATU, on 26 February 2011 - 01:28 PM, said:
Macnutjohn, on 25 February 2011 - 11:31 AM, said:
Actually, that's not technically true. As I understand it, those other Macs must be also running Snow Leopard. So no, not just "any" Mac linked to your iTunes account.......
Well no crap genius, you need Snow Leopard to have the App store that that would go without saying.
No need to get snippy. One would think that an app purchased from the app store could be transferred from one computer to another without necessarily going through the app store or needing Snow Leopard on the second computer. It's worth pointing out that that apparently won't work.
#9
Posted 28 February 2011 - 01:12 PM
I also agree with previous posters that having back-ups of the software (either on CDs or Disk Images) can be important - for software that's no longer offered or has changed for the worse (like iMovie HD or Microsoft Office).
#10
Posted 28 February 2011 - 02:49 PM
For non-USA users it is all of that plus a massive great slug by Apple as well, for identical software or content, even if it comes from our own countries.
MacUpdate is my preferred source for software, but as developers switch to the Mac App Store and price match elsewhere, I can see that being slowly choked away until it is Apple's solution or nothing.
That is assuming that Apple doesn't progressively put the squeeze on anyway and make it harder if not impossible for the "Freedom Loving" Mac User to just submit.
#12
Posted 02 March 2011 - 09:58 AM
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